Amco Mesh & Wire Co. v. Andrews

474 S.W.2d 253, 172 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 93, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2980
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1971
DocketNo. 15813
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 474 S.W.2d 253 (Amco Mesh & Wire Co. v. Andrews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amco Mesh & Wire Co. v. Andrews, 474 S.W.2d 253, 172 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 93, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2980 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

PEDEN, Justice.

Appeal from the granting of a temporary injunction in a trade secrets case. The appellant contends that the trial court failed to grant all the relief to which it was entitled.

The appellant’s points of error were that the trial court abused its discretion 1) by failing to apply the law to the established facts in granting a temporary injunction which only partially enjoined the duplication and disclosure of the appellant’s mechanism and 2) by refusing to grant a complete temporary injunction to preserve the status quo, because if its decision was based upon a finding that to preserve the status quo appellees were entitled to continue construction of two welded wire mesh machine feed mechanisms identical to the appellant’s mechanism and retain all plans, documents and instruments pertaining to them, such finding was so against the great weight of the evidence as to be clearly wrong.

In its original petition Amco alleged that it is engaged in the production of welded wire mesh, which is used as reinforcing in concrete. That Amco uses machines and equipment containing features designed and built by and for it, which are not available on machines sold to the general public but are unique trade secrets of Amco, and are known only to its officers, agents and employees. That Amco owns all the rights to a mechanism described as a welded wire mesh machine, improved feed mechanism and specification control system, having invented, developed and built it. The mechanism greatly increased and improved Amco’s production of welded mesh.

That Amco employed Weld-Mor and its president, David Andrews, in confidence to fabricate certain parts of the mechanism and furnished him the plans and specifications of the mechanism; he agreed to protect such trade secrets. This gave rise to a fiduciary relationship between the plaintiff and the defendants, and all information gained by the defendants about the mechanism was obtained as a result of Amco’s confidential disclosures. That any disclosure would be a breach of the fiduciary relationship and unfair competition. Amco alleged that the defendants were, when the petition was filed, then making a mechanism so similar to theirs as to be an appropriation of it, and that they were [255]*255threatening to continue the making and sale of such mechanism unless enjoined from doing so, to Amco’s damage exceeding $50,000. That the fiduciary relationship will continue to be violated and trade secrets will be revealed to Amco’s irreparable injury for which it has no adequate remedy at law.

The temporary relief sought by the plaintiff was that the defendants be temporarily enjoined from 1) divulging the plans, construction or operation of plaintiff’s mechanism, 2) assembling, constructing, selling and distributing it; also 3) that an order be issued commanding defendants to surrender to the plaintiff all of plaintiff’s plans, specifications or other instruments in their possession or under their control and 4) commanding that there be placed under seal in the court during the pendency of the suit a) all plans and specifications used by defendants to construct any type of welded mesh machine, b) all documents dealing with the manufacture or sale of any such mechanisms by defendants and c) all records giving names and addresses of persons who have worked on such mechanisms for Weld-Mor or have viewed plans and specifications used by Weld-Mor in constructing them.

The petition contained a prayer that the temporary injunction be made permanent on final trial and asked for actual and exemplary money damages.

After a hearing on the application for temporary injunction, an order was entered May 4, 1971. How the hearing.was terminated is not clear from the record. Neither side announced in the record that it rested, and the last event reflected in the statement of facts was the calling of a recess. The appellant does not complain that it was prevented from offering any of its evidence. The record does not contain findings of fact or conclusions of law aside from those stated in the order.

The trial court’s order contained these recitals:

“ . . . the Court proceeded to hear the evidence and arguments of counsel, and at the conclusion of said hearing, the Judge being of the opinion Defendants David A. Andrews and Weld-Mor Machines & Equipment, Inc. should not be enjoined from completing the two (2) welded mesh feed mechanisms and specification control systems now under construction in their plant, but that a fact issue exists whether Defendants have violated Plaintiff’s trade secrets and that Plaintiff may suffer irreparable injury unless Defendants are enjoined pending trial on the merits from constructing welded mesh feed mechanisms and specification control systems similar to Plaintiff’s machines, and probable cause exists for the issuance of an injunction enjoining Defendants David A. Andrews and Weld-Mor Machines & Equipment, Inc. from constructing welded mesh feed mechanisms and specification control systems similar to those used in the machines of Plaintiff Amco Mesh & Wire Company, pending trial on the merits of this cause, and prohibiting Defendants David A. Andrews and Weld-Mor Machines & Equipment, Inc. from furnishing, displaying, publicizing or in any manner divulging the plans, blueprints, instructions, construction, or operation of Plaintiff’s welded mesh feed mechanisms and specification control systems pending trial on the merits of this cause.
“IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED that Defendants David A. Andrews and Weld-Mor Machines & Equipment, Inc. may construct the two welded mesh feed mechanisms and specification control systems now under construction in their plant, but pending trial on the merits of this cause Defendants shall not construct welded mesh feed mechanisms and specification control systems for any other wire mesh machine similar to the welded mesh feed mechanisms and specification control systems used in the welded mesh [256]*256machines of Plaintiff Amco Mesh & Wire Company;
“IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED that Defendants be and are enjoined, pending trial on the merits of this cause from furnishing, displaying, publicizing or in any manner divulging plans, blueprints, instructions, construction or operation of Plaintiff, Amco Mesh & Wire Company’s welded mesh feed mechanism and specification control systems.”

Appellant’s complaint is directed, in the main, to this order’s permitting the defendants to complete construction of the two mechanisms on which they were already working and to retain possession of all documents, plans and instruments pertaining to them.

Mr. Wm. Schindler, president of Amco, testified that Amco’s feed mechanism in question was developed by its employees over a period of three years at a cost of about $150,000 to increase both the quality and the amount of the welded wire mesh produced by its machines. It was first worked out for Amco’s No. 5 mesh machine. Later, plans and specifications were prepared and submitted to three companies for bids on fabrication of such mechanisms for Amco’s other four machines, and Weld-Mor was the low bidder. Weld-Mor built the mechanisms in 1970, and they have been installed in Amco’s machines. That he knows of four companies that build welded mesh machines, but he did not know of any that produced a mechanism similar to the one Amco designed.

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Bluebook (online)
474 S.W.2d 253, 172 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 93, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amco-mesh-wire-co-v-andrews-texapp-1971.